The township estimates it will collect $349,168 for 2008 from the millage, which runs through 2012.

Fenton Township, meanwhile, approved a mosquito-control program, 4,308 to 1,490. The renewal gives local officials the authority to negotiate a new contract with a mosquito control service.

Residents and business owners could pay up to $30 per year starting 2010 through 2013. They currently pay $24 per year. The township has had a mosquito-control program since 1984.

Flint Township officials, though, weren't as lucky.

A 10-year millage to fund maintenance of township cemeteries went down in flames, 10,678 to 4,038.

The proposed 0.0625 mills would have added up to about $3 a year in taxes on a $100,000 home and could have brought in about $73,400 annually to township coffers.

The millage would have paid for the removal or repair of dead and decaying trees and the resurfacing of roads at the cemeteries. The township operates Cronk Cemetery on Beecher Road and Bristol Cemetery on Bristol Road.

In Davison, voters rejected a proposal that would have given the City Council the right to sell city-owned property without asking voters first.

The proposal failed, 1,606 to 924.

"I think it will have little, if any, impact on day-to-day operations of the city," City Manager Dale Martin said.